Galloway v. Mitchell County Electric Membership Corp.

9 S.E.2d 903, 190 Ga. 428, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 11, 1940
Docket13154.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 903 (Galloway v. Mitchell County Electric Membership Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galloway v. Mitchell County Electric Membership Corp., 9 S.E.2d 903, 190 Ga. 428, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 518 (Ga. 1940).

Opinion

Jenkins, Justice.

Notwithstanding other constitutional and statutory methods for obtaining another judge when a superior-court; judge .is disqualified, a superior-court judge of another circuit' has! jurisdiction to pass upon a petition for a temporary restraining order and interlocutory injunction, without being designated by the disqualified judge, and may thus act merely on the initiative of the plaintiff, where the disqualification exists and is made plainly to appear. Glover v. Morris, 122 Ga. 768, 771 (50 S. E. 956); Rutledge v. Bullock, 44 Ga. 23, 25, 26; Code, §§ 24-2616, 24-2617.

At such an interlocutory hearing, such judge of another' circuit is empowered, but not obliged, to pass upon demurrers to the petition. Kent v. Citizens Mutual Investment Asso., 186 Ga. 91, 93 (196 S. E. 770); Byrd v. Piha, 165 Ga. 397, 399 (141 S. E. 48); Ga. L. 1925, p. 97 (Code, § 81-1002). Where at the interlocutory hearing demurrers are argued and considered as a reason why the injunction should not be granted, but under the terms of *433 the order granting the injunction are not then passed upon, the judge does not thereby lose his jurisdiction to pass upon the demurrers, but may thereafter enter an amendatory interlocutory order dealing with the demurrers (see Code, § 24-2620; Glover v. Morris, supra), unless or until another judge, properly designated by the disqualified judge, shall in the meantime assume jurisdiction of the case, sitting as a court during term time in lieu of the disqualified judge.

Whether or not, under such circumstances and before losing jurisdiction, the judge of the other circuit could on the plaintiff’s motion, but without giving additional notice to the defendants of his intention to do so, thereafter pass on the demurrers, which had been presented and argued at the interlocutory hearing, is a question which it is unnecessary to determine, since it is here made to appear that during the appearance term of the court, and before the time when the amendatory order passing on the demurrers was entered by the judge of the other circuit, the defendants moved in open court to obtain an adjudication of their demurrers; that in response to such motion the disqualified judge thereupon called on the judge of a city court of that county to preside for him and assume jurisdiction of the cause; and that during the same term, in open court, and while acting as the court, the judge of the city court proceeded to assume jurisdiction of the cause, and thereafter, in open court and while sitting as a court, passed an order sustaining the demurrers and dismissing the action. This he did after vacating the previous order overruling the demurrers, which had been passed on by the judge of the other circuit, who, however, passed such amendatory order after the city-court judge sitting as a court had assumed jurisdiction. Since it was as a court, and not as an individual judge, that the city-court judge, designated to preside in lieu of the disqualified judge, acted (Allen v. State, 102 Ga. 619, 625-627, 29 S. E. 470; Butler v. State, 112 Ga. 76, 37 S. E. 119), he was within his jurisdiction, during the same term, to vacate the original orders, just as if he had granted them himself; and this is true irrespective of whether, if jurisdiction was still retained, the amendatory order could have been entered without notice to counsel for the defendants. See Kerr v. Kerr, 183 Ga. 573 (189 S. E. 20), and cit.; Code, § 110-702.

(a) “The phrase ca city court,’ as used in paragraph 1, section *434 5, article 6 of the constitution [Code, § 2-3301], which declares that, ‘In any county within which there is, or hereafter may be, a, city court, the judge of said court, and of the superior court, may preside in the courts of each other in eases where the judge of either court is disqualified to preside/ refers exclusively to the city courts, designated in paragraph 5, section 2, of the same article [Code, § 2-3005]; viz. city courts from which writs of error lie to the Supreme Court.” Wells v. Newton, 101 Ga. 141 (28 S. E. 640). As to what city courts are of that character, from which a writ of error will lie to the Court of Appeals since the constitutional amendment relating to that appellate court (Code, § 2-3009), see Cone v. American Surety Co., 154 Ga. 841 (115 S. E. 481); Ash v. Peoples Bank of Oliver, 149 Ga. 713, 715 (101 S. E. 912), and cit. ; Welborne v. State, 114 Ga. 793 (9), 801 (40 S. E. 857). Sectiorj 30 of the act establishing the city court of Camilla expressly pro! viding for a direct writ of error (Ga. L. 1905, pp. 184, 190), and such court otherwise conforming to the requirements of a constituj tional city court, its judge was authorized to preside in Mitchell superior court in a cause where the judge thereof was disqualified.

Under the preceding rulings, it becomes necessary to pass on the correctness of the judgment by the city-court judge, who presided in the case at the appearance term by request and in lieu of the disqualified judge, in vacating the previous orders of the judge who had first acted, and in sustaining the demurrers to the'petition^ and, as a necessary consequence, in dissolving the interlocutory injunction. This is true for the reason that, if the ruling on the demurrers was correct, the injunction would necessarily fall as be^ ing incidentally involved. If, however, the ruling on the demurrers was erroneous, such injunction would remain of force, since no writ of error has been taken therefrom, and no motion to dissolve ‘the injunction, with notice thereon, was made. Newton Mfg. Co. v. White, 47 Ga. 400 (2), 404; Code, § 55-203.

Under the act of Congress known as the “rural electrification act of 1936” (49 Stat. 1363-1365; U. S. Code Ann., title 7, §§ 901, 904, 905), the Georgia enabling act of 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, p. 644)[, and the pleaded charter of the Mitchell County Electric Membership Corporation, organized under such acts, it was empowered to furnish and sell in rural areas to its stockholder members electric energy, assist them in wiring their premises, and in acquiring, sup *435 plying, and installing electrical or plumbing equipment therein, as well as to furnish them such equipment. Such Membership Corporation was further empowered to make contracts necessary fox-such purposes, and obtain loans from the Federal Rural Electrification Administration as provided by the Federal act, §§ 904, 905.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E.2d 903, 190 Ga. 428, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-mitchell-county-electric-membership-corp-ga-1940.